Changes in the 3-dimensional arrangement of the articular cartilage
matrix during growth of the rabbit tibial
plateau were studied. Knees from newborn, and 1, 2 and 6 wk-old rabbits
were
compared with those of
adults by light and electron microscopy. The specimens were fixed,
embedded en bloc in epoxy resin and
sectioned vertically/coronally through the point where the
articular cartilage was thickest in the adult medial
tibial plateau. At birth, the proximal tibial epiphysis was cartilaginous,
but nascent articular cartilage was
recognisable as a densely cellular layer covering the tibial condyle. Within
30 μm of the articular surface, the
chondrocytes were flattened and collagen fibres ran among these cells
in a direction parallel to the surface.
Deeper in the articular cartilage, rounded cells were evenly distributed
within a random collagen fibril
network. At the centre of the plateau, the tangential layer changed little
during growth, whereas the
subjacent cellular layer grew in thickness and steadily achieved a more
vertical character in the organisation
of its constituent collagen and cellular elements. At 1 wk, cells were
separated into clusters by acellular
regions filled with collagen fibrils. At 2 wk, cells within the
forming radial zone were aligned in columns
bracketed by vertical collagen fibres. Continuity of these vertical
fibres with those in the tangential surface
layer was evident at this age. The chondrocytes were surrounded by fibrous
capsules typical of chondrons.
By 6 wk, the bases of the radial collagen fibres in the very centre of
the condyle had calcified, as had the
adjacent hypertrophic hyaline cartilage. A solid subchondral plate and
tidemark did not appear until skeletal
maturity. From birth to age 6 wk, maximum thickness of the layer identified
as primordial articular cartilage
increased from 0.13 mm to 0.70 mm, and was 1.5 mm in the adult.
Throughout growth, however, the
thickness of the tangential layer in the centre of the plateau never
exceeded 0.05 μm. In the patella, femoral
head and peripheral tibial plateau, cartilage development followed the
same
general sequence. In contrast to
the central tibial plateau, the tangential layer also grew in thickness,
but at a slower rate than that of the
radial zone. At all ages, the developing articular cartilage was structurally
distinct from the deeper hyaline
cartilage which contributed to growth of the ossification centre
through enchondral ossification. The
collagen matrix of articular cartilage acquires a characteristic, orderly
3-dimensional structure soon after
birth. Growth in cartilage thickness occurs primarily through enlargement
of the radial zone.